Pattern Sizing:
14 – 34BDid it look like the photo/drawing on the pattern envelope once you were done sewing with it?
yes

Were the instructions easy to follow?
i mostly left the instructions alone, since the construction was very simple, and used a completely different method of constructing and attaching the collar/tie piece. their method involved pressing and slipstitching, and i preferred to do it entirely by machine.

What did you particularly like or dislike about the pattern?
it’s a shape that i’ve come to associate with classic 1940s pieces and i knew the construction would be simple and the end result comfortable. i pictured it in a nice cotton as a perfect house dress or dress-down friday dress.

once i had selected this super-busy print, it was second nature to reach for this advance pattern with very little design detail.

Pattern alterations or any design changes you made:
shortened the skirt significantly. i definitely prefer a shorter skirt, and this one hits me just at the knee. i took in the side seams significantly, which (unfortunately) has exacerbated the blousy-ness of the bodice. next time, flat pattern alteration instead of on-the-fly fitting!
Would you sew it again? Would you recommend it to others?
i expect this dress to be a go-to (or TNT) for times when i have a cute cotton and just want a cute, simple dress. however, in future i will do better alterations to correct the amount of ease from the 34B bust size–i’m more of a 32, and an A besides, and there’s more ease than i would like.
Conclusion:
love. and the Yoshi print has a unicorn on it. unicorns! and butterflies!

i love my red leather jacket, but then i remembered it was friday, and here in the tundra previously known as new york city, it’s also pretty cold. and snow-covered. and i didn’t have it in me to be all red-leather-jacket-y today. so i went with this:

i think it was one of the “queer eye” guys who put it best: doesn’t everything feel better in cashmere?